cuter-testing / cuter

A concolic testing tool for the Erlang functional programming language.
GNU General Public License v3.0
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CutEr

This is the source tree for CutEr, a concolic unit testing tool for Erlang.

CAUTION: This tool is still under heavy development

License

Copyright 2014-2022 by Aggelos Giantsios, Nikolaos Papaspyrou and Kostis Sagonas.

This program is distributed under the GPL, version 3 or later. Please see the COPYING file for details.

Dependencies

In order to use CutEr, you need the following programs:

  1. Erlang/OTP

    Although CutEr may still be working with older Erlang/OTP releases, we only support Erlang/OTP releases 20.0 till 22.3. Note that using a pre-built package or binaries will not suffice if the library modules have not been compiled with debug information. In that case, you will need to build and install Erlang/OTP from source.

    Download the source code of one of the supported releases of Erlang/OTP or clone the Erlang/OTP github repository:

    git clone https://github.com/erlang/otp.git

    Then follow the instructions in INSTALL.md for building and installing Erlang/OTP.

  2. Python 3.x, x >= 6

    Download and install the latest Python 3.x distribution.

    Also, you need to install the required Python dependencies.

    python3 -m pip install -r requirements.txt

    Note that CutEr requires Python 3.6 or higher.

  3. Z3 Theorem Prover

    Download the v4.8.8 Z3 release or clone the z3-4.8.8 tag of Z3 from its git repository with the following command:

    git clone -b z3-4.8.8 --depth 1 https://github.com/Z3Prover/z3.git

    For your convenience, we include here a list of commands to build from source and install the above release of Z3:

    cd z3 ; python scripts/mk_make.py
    cd build ; make
    sudo make install

    If this sequence of commands does not work for you, follow the instructions in Z3's GitHub repository.

    Note that CutEr requires Z3 v4.8.8 or higher.

    However, also note that CutEr does not work properly with the v4.8.9 and v4.8.10 releases of Z3 due to this issue.

  4. Protocol Buffer Compiler

    If you have a Linux or an OSX system then you can skip this step and, after you have downloaded or cloned this repository, you can run the provided fetch_protoc.sh script and follow the instructions.

    If you are running on some other OS, download the 3.20.2 version of protoc for your OS and follow the instructions in readme.txt.

Installation

Usage

Let's say that you have a simple module foo that just contains the exported function bar/2. The source file foo.erl is:

-module(foo).
-export([bar/2]).

-spec bar([number()], [number()]) -> number().
bar([], Ys) -> lists:sum(Ys);
bar([X|Xs], [Y|Ys]) -> X * Y + bar(Xs, Ys).

For single file tests, such as the above, the simplest way to run CutEr is to use the cuter script as follows:

./cuter foo bar '[[1], [2]]'

i.e. supply it with three arguments: the module name, the function name, and the list of arguments for the call that will act as a seed for the concolic execution of the unit under test. If there is no foo.beam file, the cuter script will automatically compile the foo.erl file and create a .beam file with debug information.

Alternatively, go to the directory of the source file and compile it with debug information:

erlc +debug_info foo.erl

CutEr can then be invoked by calling the cuter:run/3 function:

erl -noshell -eval "cuter:run(foo, bar, [[1], [2]])" -s init stop

This will report a list of inputs that lead to runtime errors, for example foo:bar([0], []) and foo:bar([3,2,1], [0.0,0]).

To sum up, cuter:run/3 is called as cuter:run(M, F, As) where

There is also a cuter:run/4 function that takes these three arguments but also a numeric argument Depth that denotes the depth of the search (i.e. roughly the number of branches that will be explored). This depth can also be specified as an option of the cuter script:

./cuter foo bar '[[1], [2]]' -d 42

CutEr provides more API functions that also come with options that control the concolic execution of Erlang programs. These will be explained in a set of forthcoming tutorials. In the meantime, you can find out about them by the command:

./cuter --help

and by browsing the source code of CutEr.

Have fun with the tool!